The decomposition of NH 3 to N 2 and H 2 was studied on two surfaces: Surface E a (kJ/mol) W 163 Os 197 Without a catalyst, the activation energy is 335 kJ/mol. a. Which surface is the better heterogeneous catalyst for the decomposition of NH 3 ? Why? b. How many times faster is the reaction at 298 K on the W surface compared with the reaction with no catalyst present? Assume that the frequency factor A is the same for each reaction. c. The decomposition reaction on the two surfaces obeys a rate law of the form Rate = k [ NH 3 ] [ H 2 ] How can you explain the inverse dependence of the rate on the H 2 concentration?
The decomposition of NH 3 to N 2 and H 2 was studied on two surfaces: Surface E a (kJ/mol) W 163 Os 197 Without a catalyst, the activation energy is 335 kJ/mol. a. Which surface is the better heterogeneous catalyst for the decomposition of NH 3 ? Why? b. How many times faster is the reaction at 298 K on the W surface compared with the reaction with no catalyst present? Assume that the frequency factor A is the same for each reaction. c. The decomposition reaction on the two surfaces obeys a rate law of the form Rate = k [ NH 3 ] [ H 2 ] How can you explain the inverse dependence of the rate on the H 2 concentration?
Solution Summary: The author explains that the substance that speeds up the rate of reaction without getting consumed itself in a chemical reaction is known as catalyst.
The decomposition of NH3 to N2 and H2 was studied on two surfaces:
Surface
Ea (kJ/mol)
W
163
Os
197
Without a catalyst, the activation energy is 335 kJ/mol.
a. Which surface is the better heterogeneous catalyst for the decomposition of NH3? Why?
b. How many times faster is the reaction at 298 K on the W surface compared with the reaction with no catalyst present? Assume that the frequency factor A is the same for each reaction.
c. The decomposition reaction on the two surfaces obeys a rate law of the form
Rate
=
k
[
NH
3
]
[
H
2
]
How can you explain the inverse dependence of the rate on the H2 concentration?
Briefly state why trifluoroacetic acid is more acidic than acetic acid.
Explain why acid chlorides are more reactive than amides in reactions with nucleophiles.
Calculating the pH of a weak base titrated with a strong acid
An analytical chemist is titrating 101.7 mL of a 0.3500M solution of piperidine (C5H10NH) with a 0.05700M solution of HClO4. The pK of piperidine is 2.89.
Calculate the pH of the base solution after the chemist has added 682.9 mL of the HClO solution to it.
4
Note for advanced students: you may assume the final volume equals the initial volume of the solution plus the volume of HClO solution added.
4
Round your answer to 2 decimal places.
pH = .11
00.
18
Ar
Chapter 12 Solutions
OWLv2 with MindTap Reader, 4 terms (24 months) Printed Access Card for Zumdahl/Zumdahl's Chemistry, 9th
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Author:Steven D. Gammon, Ebbing, Darrell Ebbing, Steven D., Darrell; Gammon, Darrell Ebbing; Steven D. Gammon, Darrell D.; Gammon, Ebbing; Steven D. Gammon; Darrell